I'd like to take a crack at answering the question, because I'm an economist first and I guess a feminist second.
I agree with you that most people in Canada have no clue what a gender budget analysis is, and I don't think we should be spending a lot of time educating them on what it is. I said at the conclusion of my last point that the reason we do it is to talk about who benefits from what governments do. It's that simple. For over a decade now, women have been....
The minimal test of government should be not to make things worse. That should be the minimal test. In 1995 we had a slew of budget cuts that set women back. We have had 12 years of back-to-back budgetary surpluses, and women's economic position has not advanced.
So where we, I think, agree is that when you have a business like a government, where you're spending $280 billion every year, can you spend anything to make things better for women? What can you do to make things better? If the answer is tax cuts, and actually it's not the spending side but the tax cuts side that you want to focus on, can you make sure that your tax cuts are actually doing something for the people who need the most help?
That's why you do gender budget analysis. It is not to say that it is sexospécifique. It is not to say that it is a project specifically for women. It is to say that it is friendly to women.
We ask, what do women need? They need, especially if they're worrying about violence, a safe place. If there's no market for affordable housing, they're stuck where they are. If there are no shelters due to overflowing, they can't get out. You want to make sure that things as basic as shelter--safe shelter that is available and that they can afford--are available to women. That's number one. There is a list of other things. We know what they are.
So this is not gender specific, this is gender friendly. Honestly, I couldn't agree with you more about the language being off-putting, but on the actual intent, I think you can actually get to a place that is not as ideologically divided as many areas of government. Presumably everybody wants to score points on how you're making things better for the electorate, and half of the electorate is female. Can you actually point to something you did that made it better for women? I think you can. I think you could probably come up with something that says in fact this year we're going to do that.
This government said, in its last budget, that you're going to develop an action plan on women. I don't know about my colleagues, but the reason I'm here is that I'm taking you seriously. I'd like to work with you. I'd like to work with these people as well. I would like to come up with something concrete that comes out of the action plan, something that is actionable, so that this isn't just an action plan but something you're going to do.
Across this country, poverty reduction strategies are exploding in four or five jurisdictions. At the federal level, the current minority government that is leading us has no poverty reduction plan. This could be it. This could be your contribution to the discussion that inequality has grown in good times and bad, and we have to reverse it.